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2:00
Grand Gallery, the sloping room that goes up
2:02
to the King's Chamber. I walked it. Yeah.
2:04
You've been in the... Yeah, I've been there. I've
2:06
been to Egypt twice, or excuse me, three times. I've
2:08
been in the Great Pyramid twice. Yeah, me too.
2:10
And... Big, big, big sloped.
2:13
They've put in some janky stairs. Yeah.
2:16
And then you go up to the King's
2:18
Chamber. Right. So this hidden
2:20
chamber that they found through, it's called Muon Technology
2:22
that sends these cosmic rays through the rock. It
2:25
can penetrate hundreds of meters of rock, which is
2:27
wild. I'm like, how does it even work like
2:29
that? But through science, so
2:31
they have identified there's this hidden chamber
2:33
above the Grand Gallery that's
2:35
even larger than the Grand Gallery but of a
2:37
similar shape. So it might be a second
2:39
Grand Gallery. And what's interesting is that they
2:41
first discovered it in 2016. The
2:44
study on it was published in 2017. But
2:46
I'm like, here it is, the end of 2024. Eight
2:50
years ago, they haven't gone looking for it.
2:53
And there's no plan in place to go looking for it. So
2:56
wild. Which is right. So I'm
2:58
like, how is this even possible? I'm like, if
3:00
the Great Pyramid, I would say, is the most
3:02
mysterious structure in all of human history, there's
3:05
all the debate on whether it was a tomb
3:07
for the pharaohs, whether it was a lost technology,
3:10
whether even if people
3:12
want to say, let me just tell the
3:14
camera and people listening, I don't think it was built to be a tomb
3:16
for the pharaoh. Not for
3:18
a second. There's something so common. Has
3:20
anyone ever been to Valley of the Kings,
3:22
where they have all of the tombs in
3:25
there and they're exquisite? And there's everything,
3:27
floor to ceiling, everything is
3:29
covered in beautiful artwork and
3:32
pictures and stories. And it's
3:34
nothing like the... All the
3:37
pyramids are basic. They're pyramids.
3:39
Right. There's nothing written.
3:41
There's no... No, nothing written. And not only that,
3:43
people think it's like a maze. Like, oh, they
3:45
were hiding the pharaohs in there. It's like, no,
3:47
you just, you go in, you go down and
3:49
you go up and you're there. It's not like
3:51
this maze where it's like they're trying to hide
3:53
it behind some blocks. But what's wild is that
3:56
they have the technology to go
3:58
looking for it. They could literally just... drill
4:00
a hole and send a tube camera through,
4:02
just like they do in surgeries, and
4:05
go looking. And I'm like, if this is the most
4:07
mysterious structure in all of human history, and
4:09
there's so much debate on whether it was a tomb for the
4:11
pharaoh, but never even mind that, because some people listening, look, it
4:13
was a tomb for the pharaoh, fine. Then
4:16
maybe in this hidden chamber, there's a buried
4:18
pharaoh in there. Maybe there's information
4:21
about our lost ancient past, about the history
4:23
of the Egyptians. Maybe there's information about how
4:25
the pyramid was constructed, because a lot of
4:28
people don't realize, I know you do, but
4:31
the Egyptians left us with no
4:33
explanation of any kind whatsoever for
4:35
how they constructed the pyramid. Nothing.
4:38
People were like, do we know how? I'm like, no.
4:40
You know how hard it is to run uphill? Now
4:43
go ahead and try and drag something
4:45
that's like 10 tons up
4:47
a hill, please. With ropes. Right.
4:50
Oh, and not only that, the largest stones in the Great Pyramid
4:52
that are a few hundred feet up came from
4:55
500 miles away, and they weigh between 70 and 80
4:57
tons. How
4:59
did they lift those things upwards of 300 feet above
5:02
the ground? It is
5:04
such a mind f in the most
5:06
fun way possible. So insulting,
5:08
I think, to humanity that they should tell
5:10
us that it was rolled on logs. I
5:12
think it's insulting. You want to hear something
5:14
fun? I nerded out hard on
5:17
this one. Last time I was in Egypt, they were explaining
5:19
that, yeah, they would have rolled them on
5:21
cedar logs, and they brought the cedar over from
5:23
Lebanon. And I'm like, because
5:25
palm trees are not strong
5:28
enough to roll anything on, and Egypt has a
5:30
lack of trees. So yeah, they
5:32
surely brought them in from Lebanon. And
5:34
the Lebanon cedar is a profound tree
5:37
that they have brought to Egypt. But
5:39
I started nerding out on this, and maybe
5:42
you've heard of the Mohs Scale of Hardness, which
5:44
is the measure of the hardness of stones. And
5:46
that's a huge thing that's debated in Egyptology, because
5:48
they're like, well, how did they use bronze chisels
5:50
and hammers to carve granite? Which is a huge
5:52
mystery, because bronze chisels and hammers won't do it.
5:55
I've seen people tested in modern times.
5:57
It doesn't work. It's not feasible. they
6:00
did it. And so I'm like, is there
6:02
a scale for the hardness of wood? Because I'm like, if there,
6:05
listen, the heaviest stone in Egypt
6:07
that they move is approximately 1000
6:09
metric tons. It's the Ramasim
6:12
statue in Luxor. It was moved approximately 170
6:15
miles and 1000 metric tons is 2.2 million
6:22
pounds. Oh my God. To put this into perspective, the
6:24
largest stone we've moved to modern times was 340
6:27
tons. It's at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
6:29
They moved it 109 miles. It took a year of
6:33
planning, cost 10 million bucks. It
6:35
took like nine days of moving it four miles
6:38
an hour. They had to shut down freeways. They
6:40
couldn't even move it on certain roads because the
6:42
weight of it would crush the
6:44
asphalt. And I'm like, so hold on
6:46
a second, 340 tons to 1000, it's one third the weight. And
6:50
you're telling me the Egyptians moved that? And let me also tell
6:52
you this, this is a fun topic. The,
6:54
they had to custom build a trailer truck around
6:56
that 340 ton stone. It was 260 feet long, had
7:02
100 and almost 200 semi truck wheels had 44
7:05
axles. This thing was a, this
7:07
was a project. Oh, my God. And I think it was the new,
7:10
it was the Los Angeles Times that called it the largest
7:12
project since the Egyptians built the pyramids. And
7:15
so I'm like, this is a big deal. And I'm like,
7:17
so you're telling me there's something that weighs three times as
7:19
heavy that they moved with primitive
7:22
technology. So this brings me back to the cedar
7:24
thing. They're like, they rolled it
7:26
on cedar logs. So this is right nerd it
7:28
out. I'm like, is there a scale for the
7:30
hardness of wood? And it turns out that question.
7:33
So there is a hardest for wood because people
7:35
use wood flooring. And so there's certain types of
7:37
wood. If you go cheap, your furniture and your
7:39
high heels will like literally cause indents in it
7:42
and you'll ruin your own wood. So it's like,
7:45
you know, you have to have certain types of wood to look
7:47
good in your house. Well, it turns out the Lebanon cedar is
7:50
amongst the softest wood
7:53
on earth. Not the softest, but it's at
7:55
the very bottom of this huge scale. And
7:57
I'm like, wait a second. So it's good for like. Sorry,
16:00
did you want to come at 4 a.m.
16:02
tomorrow? Because it opens then. Right. Do you
16:04
want to lay? So they don't want you to lay in the
16:06
stone box. And so I'm like, well, it turns out if you
16:08
give them a few bucks, like they can now lay in the
16:10
box. I did it. I got laid in there. Exactly.
16:13
Did you tone in the box, too? Yes.
16:15
And it vibrated. I
16:17
have a wild story about that. Really? I told you
16:19
this before when we bumped into each other at the
16:22
Amfest. So for those who don't know, so
16:24
the Great Pyramid, there's the King's and the Queen's Chamber. And
16:26
the King's Chamber is much larger. And at
16:29
the back, when you walk into that chamber, at
16:31
the back, there's
16:33
a sarcophagus, or that's what we call it.
16:35
It could just be a box that's dimensionally
16:37
correct for the Ark, let's say. But anyway,
16:40
it's quite thick all the way around. But
16:42
it's empty. And there's a little crack. There's
16:44
like a break off one of the corners.
16:46
But generally speaking, it's just an open container,
16:49
essentially. So the last time I was in
16:51
Egypt was last September, a year ago, a month ago.
16:54
And I had the pleasure of going with my buddy,
16:56
George St. Pierre, who's a notable mixed martial artist. A
16:58
lot of people consider him the goat. Oh,
17:01
yeah. Canadian guy? Yes. Yeah. By
17:03
the way, such a lovely individual. As real as
17:05
you can imagine, exactly. Because he's always known as
17:07
being the good guy. And he's just as real
17:09
in person. And I love him. And he has
17:11
a huge interest in ancient civilizations. So
17:14
I had the pleasure of going with him. And this is the first time he
17:16
was ever in the Great Pyramid. We gave the guard a
17:18
few bucks. And he laid in it.
17:20
And Yusuf Awian, who is the son of
17:22
the lead, Akeem Abdel-Awian, that was the mentor
17:24
of John Anthony West. And
17:27
he's a wisdom speaker before he had
17:29
passed away. And he had carried on
17:31
legends that were passed on from the
17:33
people, the kemet, which was said in
17:35
Egypt. They say that before the Egyptians,
17:37
there was the commissions. They don't
17:39
teach this in school. But that's what they grew
17:41
up knowing for the people that lived in Egypt. And keep
17:43
in mind, these people. That's what they called Egypt, kemet. Yes.
17:46
A lot of people don't know that,
17:48
though. And it's fascinating. So these people
17:50
have a home literally across the street
17:52
from the Sphinx. Their fifth floor patio
17:54
overlooks it. It's wild. So Yusuf does
17:56
the om and vibrating it.
17:59
And he did. did it for George St. Pierre for a couple minutes.
18:01
And I have the permission of him to tell this story,
18:03
so I'm not like, you know, he told me I could
18:06
tell it, but it's kind of an important story. And
18:08
so he laid in it, and it vibrated. And
18:11
Mary, you feel the whole thing vibrate. It's the
18:13
stone, like it feels really weird. And
18:15
this guy's been retired for, I don't
18:17
know, eight years or whatever it's been.
18:20
And he comes out of the box, his
18:23
eyes were wide open, and
18:25
he's like, I'm coming out of retirement. This
18:28
is like French-Canadian accent. So
18:30
a few hours later, we're at the hotel, we're taking a
18:32
swim in the pool. And I
18:34
asked him, like, hey, so I don't know,
18:37
you mentioned something after you came out of the box.
18:39
You remember what you said about wanting to come out
18:41
of retirement? He's like, oh, no,
18:43
Jeanie, I'm not coming out of retirement. He's
18:46
like, but that's how I felt in the moment. He said, I
18:48
felt so energized. And I'm like, I
18:50
feel like this is an important story. Because if
18:52
the Great Pyramid was some sort of technology, some
18:54
people have suggested that it was a DNA restoration
18:56
thing. This is, of course, all fun
18:58
talk, like who knows. But the fact
19:01
that this guy, who a lot of people thought was the
19:03
goat, and he's been retired, and he's committed to being retired,
19:06
within literally five seconds of him coming out
19:09
of that box with the vibration, that's the
19:11
first thing he said. And I thought
19:14
that that was a profoundly interesting thing.
19:16
Of all things to say and feel
19:18
for someone like him, I
19:21
don't know, I just felt there was something to it. I'm like, I don't know
19:23
what to make of it. But I'm like, why
19:25
was that how he felt in that exact moment
19:27
that he came out of it? And I will
19:29
say this, every time I've been
19:31
in the pyramids, I feel good, there's a vibe in there.
19:34
And it's a little hot on top. It is, it's muggy.
19:36
It's a little, there's not a lot of air moving in
19:38
there, but it is a
19:40
vibe in there. It smells like breath and sweat,
19:42
right? It's like muggy. Especially when
19:44
you get hyped in there with like 30 people or 40
19:46
people, and holy shit, it
19:48
gets hot in there. It's a little obnoxious. Three
19:51
hours later, you're like. Yeah, every
19:53
time I've been in there, as much as I like being in
19:55
the pyramid, I'm eager to get out because like you're sweaty. Me
19:57
too. I feel like I'm gonna
19:59
get, I'm. Look, I'm not like a total germaphobe, but
20:02
I don't like being sick. And being in there surrounded
20:04
by everyone else's breath, I'm like, oh, I'm definitely gonna
20:06
be sick. There's all these legends around the world about
20:08
people living to be hundreds, even thousands of years old.
20:10
That's right. It's that legend
20:13
exists on multiple continents. If
20:15
there's someone alive in the chamber.
20:18
Maybe we shouldn't open that cavity. Maybe it's
20:20
the same thing. It's like
20:22
Indiana Jones, when he meets,
20:25
when he has to go through the Temple
20:28
of Doom and do all the challenges to
20:30
find the, and then pick the
20:32
correct cup. The Grail. The Holy Grail. And
20:34
he had to, there was a, what
20:38
would he be called, with the armor on
20:40
it? The Knight. The Knight. Yeah, the Guardian.
20:42
The Knights of Templar. Yeah, 800 years, I
20:44
think he had been guarding it. And he's like, remember
20:46
that guy? He's like, that line, he's like, he chose
20:48
poorly. Because he chose the gold, or as the lady
20:50
that did. They chose the beautiful gold with stones on
20:52
it. Diamonds and crap. And then the other one was
20:55
like the cup of a carpenter. The
20:57
plainest one in there was the one. And I
20:59
think there's a fun message about that. That's my
21:01
favorite Indiana Jones one, is the Last Crusade. Totally,
21:03
me too. Yeah, Sean Connery. But I've
21:06
also heard that the Ark of the
21:08
Covenant movie was from,
21:11
I think it was from my friend, Nassim Harameen. He
21:13
said that one was the most accurate
21:15
representation of the Ark
21:17
story and the Ark situation. That
21:20
the Ark was trying to be
21:22
acquired by
21:24
Hitler. And
21:28
that is what's happening in that
21:30
movie. And then it shows in
21:32
the movie also the devastating
21:35
power of it, if
21:37
you look at it. Also I've heard
21:39
other stories about it amplifies intention.
21:41
So it amplifies whatever
21:43
your intention is. So if you use it for
21:47
selfish, greedy things, it essentially
21:49
amplifies that frequency versus the
21:51
truth and authenticity and
21:53
positive intention. But
21:58
anyway, the Ark of the Covenant movie. was apparently
22:00
is a pretty pretty good representation
22:02
of it. Do you want to hear something
22:04
wild? Of course. Here this will be one of
22:07
the most provocative things we can talk about which
22:09
is Nazi
22:11
archaeology. So it is
22:13
a documented fact that Hitler and
22:16
the Nazis had an obsession over ancient
22:18
history. They went looking for the Ark
22:20
of the Covenant, they went
22:22
looking for the Holy Grail, they went looking
22:24
for Thor's hammer, which I'm like what? And
22:28
they had allocated enormous resources to
22:30
go look for ancient giants in Africa. I
22:32
couldn't believe this when I read this so
22:34
it turns out a lot of people think
22:36
like no he's he's quoting Indiana Jones. I'm
22:38
like actually Indiana Jones is loosely based on
22:40
a true story in that the Nazis went
22:42
looking for ancient relics. That's what I was
22:44
saying. So here's the thing when I was
22:47
in Baalbek Lebanon last September there's one of
22:49
the most mysterious ancient sites. I
22:51
think it's one of the best examples of a
22:53
lost civilization that was advanced because there's these 900
22:55
ton stones that were moved. Huge
22:57
pillars right? Huge pillars but then they have
23:00
these huge stone blocks that are 900 tons that were
23:02
lifted and stacked 30 feet above the ground. It is
23:04
unbelievable but here's the thing all over that
23:06
site are swastikas. I went down
23:08
the rabbit hole in swastikas. Let me just say
23:11
let me just preface this because people blast me
23:13
for this. Can I swear on this or should
23:15
I not? Absolutely. Okay so fuck the Nazis. Okay
23:17
like fuck Hitler. Okay like
23:19
what right like what else do
23:22
However I am very curious on
23:24
why there's no doubt that the
23:26
Nazis were extremely intelligent. They
23:29
may have gone down an evil path. Yes they
23:31
did but I'm not talking about the evil. I'm
23:33
talking about their interest in lost civilizations and
23:36
why did they adapt the swastika? A
23:39
lot of people don't realize that the swastika
23:41
is an ancient symbol that dates back approximately
23:43
10,000 years and is found
23:45
on five continents around
23:47
the world including. As tech
23:49
looking now that you think I mean like what I would
23:51
say. Oh yeah you could find it in South America.
23:54
You could find it in Europe, Africa,
23:57
Asia as well as North America and so
23:59
the swastika dates back here in the
24:01
United States, between 22 to
24:03
2,500 years ago on
24:05
the Hopewell Mound people in Ohio, but
24:07
also the Pima Indians here in Arizona,
24:09
the Navajo, I believe the
24:11
Hopi or the Yavapai up in Northern
24:13
Arizona, all had the swastika. And
24:16
I'm like, this is such a unique symbol. And
24:18
I should say that some people say, well, maybe it was the Milky
24:21
Way galaxy, maybe it was the Big Dipper, but I'm like,
24:24
that is not exactly what it looks
24:26
like. And I'm not convinced. And I don't also think
24:28
that it's something that,
24:30
look, the fact that it's found in five
24:32
continents, I find it's such a unique symbol,
24:34
I think is extremely interesting. And I'm curious
24:37
why they had such an obsession. And
24:40
let me just say, I don't care about Aryan
24:42
people. Like I don't, whatever their obsession was on
24:44
that, and maybe they're talking about ancient white aliens,
24:46
maybe, you know, but like, whatever
24:49
that was, like, I don't care about. What
24:51
I care about is the lost ancient realm
24:53
as far as our true history being unknown
24:55
to us. Like we date back
24:57
hundreds of thousands of years in our modern cranial
24:59
cavity. They say that we're a
25:01
6,000 year old civilization from the Sumerians.
25:03
And then we have other sites like in Turkey, like
25:05
Gobekli Tepe that we discovered that are 11,600 years old,
25:10
which is 7,000 years older than Stonehenge, which
25:13
is a total mystery in itself. And
25:15
I'm like, a lot of people
25:17
don't realize that we have no idea the
25:19
true history of ancient civilizations. And I'm starting
25:22
to think that maybe there's
25:24
certain powers that be on this planet that
25:26
have more information about it than we
25:29
do. There seems to be a suppression,
25:31
whether it's the void inside the
25:33
Great Pyramid, which to not excavate
25:35
it is inexplicable. Gobekli
25:38
Tepe, which I'd love to talk about because
25:40
it is the oldest, arguably, the oldest and
25:42
most mysterious ancient site on Earth. Like I
25:44
would say the Great Pyramid is the most
25:46
mysterious relic, but we have no
25:48
idea who built Gobekli Tepe. And
25:51
to people who aren't familiar, it's a site in
25:53
Turkey. I recommend they Google it. It's a site
25:55
comprising of some 200 pillars. Only
25:58
72 of them have been on Earth. The
26:00
site was discovered, or they started excavations
26:02
on it between 1994 and 1995, and
26:06
only between 5 and 10 percent of it has
26:08
been excavated since. And in just the
26:10
last few years, and this is
26:12
all in writing, by the way, this is all from
26:14
the people that control the site, they
26:16
have said that they are now pulling
26:18
back from large-scale excavations and deferring it
26:21
for future generations, and they say now
26:23
it might be 150 years before
26:25
it's fully excavated. And
26:28
just to clarify, yes, this is one of the
26:30
most mysterious sites on Earth. We have no idea
26:32
who built it, how, or even precisely
26:34
when. We just know that it was buried 11,600 years ago,
26:36
approximately. And
26:38
so for it to only be
26:41
5 to 10 percent excavated, and
26:44
before we started, we were talking briefly about Noah's
26:48
Ark, the Ark, and so
26:50
here's something fun. So a
26:54
lot of people think that Noah's Ark
26:56
was discovered in Turkey, on Mount Eret.
26:58
Well, Derinkuyu, the underground cities, as well
27:01
as Gobekli Tepe, is also in Turkey,
27:04
same region. And what's
27:06
interesting is that one of the first... Are
27:08
they both in the Cappadonia region? Both of
27:10
them are? Derinkuyu? Derinkuyu's, certainly. The underground town...
27:14
Is absolutely in Cappadocia. Gobekli Tepe, I think, is technically not...
27:16
But it's not far away. I mean, look, it'd take
27:18
us a couple hours' drive. But as far as if you're
27:21
looking on a map, they're there. And
27:23
what's interesting is that one of the first
27:25
verses in Genesis, in the Bible, that
27:28
talks about Noah emerging from the Ark, he
27:31
talks about building an altar to make
27:33
sacrifices of every clean animal... Or, excuse
27:35
me, some of every clean animal and
27:37
some of every clean bird. And
27:39
the Ark story is that he had, you
27:42
know, collected the animals in order for the continuity
27:44
of the survival of the human species before the
27:46
flood. And what's wild about Gobekli Tepe is
27:49
that all of the pillars are depicting
27:51
animals and birds. Some
27:53
people have suggested that this
27:56
could be the monument that he
27:58
had conducted. Now this, let me
28:00
just say, I've been, a lot of
28:02
people identify with this, but a lot of people think it's just so
28:04
far fetched. They hear Noah's Ark and they're like, of
28:07
course there was no boat, of course there was a
28:09
flood that covered every mountain on earth
28:11
and I'm like, I'm not saying that's what happened.
28:13
It's a frickin', you know, this story is
28:15
many thousands of years old, so it doesn't have to be 100%
28:17
true. But was there
28:20
some sort of Ark? And I'm like, when
28:22
we're talking about these underground cities, so Darren QU is the
28:24
biggest, but there's 200 others. And-
28:28
Really? Yes, and a handful of them could
28:30
support tens of thousands of people. Upwards
28:33
of 50,000 people. Well when you
28:35
stop and you think about one of
28:37
the big threats to our planet is
28:39
asteroids hitting. Another one
28:42
could be your own nuclear warfare, right?
28:45
What would you do if you couldn't get off planet? You
28:48
go in. You go underground. You
28:50
go in. And this is where
28:52
things get nuts, where it's like, even,
28:55
I wanna say it's the Hopi people in
28:58
Arizona, the Native Americans, as well as the
29:00
Aborigines. So there's legends throughout
29:02
the world about, it's in the Bible
29:04
and elsewhere, where beings came down, angels,
29:07
and bred with the women and created the
29:09
Nephilim. So there's that. So they're like
29:12
the hybrid demigods, essentially, right? Are the
29:14
gods with the humans create these demigods?
29:16
Yes. That's the Nephilim? Yeah, well,
29:18
Nephilim, yes. And they were said to be giants.
29:21
But here's what's wild is that the Hopi people and
29:24
the Aborigines, they say that the people came from underground.
29:26
Which kinda gives me goosebumps, because I'm like, what if?
29:29
I'm very curious about inner earth stuff. I
29:31
am too. I'm very curious. I
29:33
run this thought experiment of, and
29:35
I've asked scientists and people
29:38
that understand more about how this is
29:40
possible, is that when I
29:42
walk outside, I'm like, oh, I'm outside. I'm
29:44
free and clear. There
29:47
we go. But I can't see that
29:49
far. I don't know how far far
29:51
is. I've never been outside. I've
29:53
never looked at the planet before. Then
29:55
I asked the question, what would it take to
29:57
create an environment that felt the same? ago,
36:00
and that essentially these properties or
36:02
these big structures, there's some different
36:04
places in the world that are
36:07
like these exquisite, beautiful places that
36:09
are abandoned. There's nothing there, as
36:12
if they just kind of didn't re-civilize some of
36:14
them, and that we were basically like men in
36:16
black. And so when you give the timeline of
36:18
like 126 years or 100, it's
36:22
like sounds similar to like the Tartarius,
36:24
one of the theories that it
36:26
was actually existed not that long ago, and
36:28
that we were just kind of wiped out
36:30
mentally. The Tartaria thing is wild. So I
36:32
have admittedly not done a super deep dive
36:34
on this, but here's what I've concluded is
36:36
that I was surprised to
36:38
learn that there are many,
36:40
many maps from hundreds of years ago
36:43
that show this massive civilization called Tartaria.
36:45
I'm like, I don't remember learning about
36:47
Tartarian school. I'm not saying it's never
36:49
been mentioned, but I can tell you
36:51
I have no recollection of it because
36:53
if it was mentioned, it was mentioned
36:55
for half a second. I'm probably not
36:58
mentioned at all. And I'm like, there's
37:00
a lot, because the theory with it is that there
37:02
was a mud flood, that there was something that happened
37:04
that destroyed a civilization, and it
37:07
was like a reset of some kind, and then you have
37:09
all these buildings that are half underground. I
37:12
can't say for certain one way or the other
37:14
whether it was a mud flood or not. What
37:16
I can say is that there was a civilization
37:18
called Tartaria that was far larger than anything I
37:20
had imagined. There's maps showing it, and I know
37:22
nothing about it. That's interesting. I
37:25
don't know what to make of it all, but
37:27
I do identify with continental crust displacement as
37:29
that could tie into a mud flood. I
37:31
do think that, and although I've been ...
37:35
Okay, so here's a fun topic. We did a
37:37
podcast a couple years ago now. Let
37:39
me tell you something that's happened since then. I
37:42
went on another podcast, and
37:44
I talked about the theory of
37:46
pull shifts. I
37:48
talked about how there could be
37:50
cataclysms related to it. And then
37:53
I had Media Matters, who's
37:55
funded by George Soros. They did a huge hit
37:57
piece on me for talking about
37:59
this on another podcast where I simply said
38:02
that maybe it caused continental crust displacement and
38:04
they went after me hard. I
38:06
said in it that I even talked about climate
38:08
change. So it happens when you go on Joe Rogan Jimmy,
38:10
you know, gets a lot of attention. It turns
38:12
out that there's people watching it waiting for you
38:14
to mess up or say anything controversial
38:17
and they come after you and they do
38:19
articles. And I couldn't believe it. I'm like,
38:21
why are they coming after this dork on
38:23
YouTube talking about ancient conspiracies?
38:25
I'm like, this is pretty harmless stuff. I
38:28
made it crystal clear that the men in
38:30
black showed up. Apparently, apparently.
38:32
And they put outside my door
38:34
every night now. And they have a
38:36
black hat on. If anything happens to me, it
38:38
is a conspiracy. If anything
38:40
happens to me, I would never kill myself. I'm
38:43
going on a record. I would never kill myself.
38:45
Yeah. I don't think I have any access to
38:48
any information that would make them want to do
38:50
me in, but at the same time, there's
38:52
a saying that access to consciousness though.
38:55
Yeah. There's a saying that you get the
38:57
most flack when you're over the target. And
39:00
the reality is that there's something involving pole
39:02
shifts. Elon Musk talked about this. He
39:04
talked about pole shifts being a deep or excuse me,
39:07
not pole shifts, ice ages
39:09
being a deep, deep rabbit hole. And he reiterated,
39:11
this was on podcast. Let me give him a
39:13
shout out the full send podcast. This is over
39:15
two years ago now, but he
39:17
talked about towards the end of it that ice ages are
39:19
a deep, deep rabbit hole. And then he said it
39:22
again, he reiterated himself as a deep, deep rabbit
39:24
hole. And look at his interest. This guy's a
39:26
smart, he's, I consider him a genius. He
39:29
wants to get off planet. He thinks that continuity
39:31
of the human species is dependent on getting off
39:33
planet. And he's obviously has
39:35
an interest in ice ages. And
39:38
the reality is that ice ages are a
39:40
thing and it's, we don't have a
39:42
full understanding of them. But when
39:44
I look at how old the human species is,
39:46
as far as in our modern capacity
39:49
of our cranial capacity, modern meat
39:51
suit, right? Over 3000 years old.
39:53
And we have like no explanation of anything
39:55
older than 6000 years old. And
39:58
within it has been. over,
40:00
there's been four interglacial periods, arguably five,
40:02
but let's just say four, over the
40:05
last 450,000 years, which means that there's
40:07
been these periods of cooling and then
40:09
periods of warming, and we're in a
40:11
warming right now. You mean
40:13
it's not global warming? Jimmy. Listen.
40:16
That's wild. Ancient cow parts. You
40:18
mean this planet just does its own thing? This
40:20
is very pseudo. I would like it if we
40:22
turned the cameras off now. Interview is over, I
40:24
refuse. Media matters scared me. Look.
40:29
It's climate change. Strike that. Shut
40:31
down the gas stoves, please. Buy
40:34
electric. Stop farting. That's it. No,
40:36
I mean, look, it doesn't mean
40:38
that running your car in exhaust
40:40
doesn't do something, but that's
40:42
like a micromaniscule
40:44
little difference compared to what
40:47
the planet does over
40:49
time, over and over again, heating and
40:51
cooling, heating and cooling, and it's not
40:53
as hot as it's ever been, even.
40:55
Here's a fun fact. I was astonished
40:57
to learn from a Nobel Prize laureate
41:00
that's, so there's multiple Nobel Prize laureates
41:02
that are contradicting the mainstream narrative
41:04
on man-made climate change. We're talking about
41:07
Nobel Prize laureates in physics. I want
41:09
to listen to these people because they
41:11
pointed out that isn't an interesting
41:13
fact that the Earth was warmer just 4,000 years ago.
41:17
And I'm like, what? I didn't say
41:19
that again. It was warmer 4,000 years ago. So
41:22
the answer is ancient cow farts. So if we
41:24
could simply, look, listen, Bill Gates cares about us.
41:27
Why would, come on, he has all the money. Look,
41:30
he's a philanthropist. Just Google him. He's a great guy.
41:32
That's right. That's right. And so I want to listen
41:34
to him. Even though he
41:36
did not invent Microsoft and it was the gentleman from IBM
41:38
that he bought the patent for him, I don't care. I
41:40
care about him creating Microsoft in the narrative that we've been
41:43
told. He's our savior. Yeah, and so if he wants to
41:45
get rid of cows, I think that
41:47
we should eat fake meat. That's where I'm at now. So
41:50
3D print meat. Yeah, and I'd like to give
41:52
a shout out to Big Pharma on
41:54
this podcast. Changing the world. Get
41:58
vaccinated. Killing one more time. We
42:01
do love trauma medicine though, let's be clear about that.
42:03
Yeah. If we get in a car
42:05
crash, we're happy for modern medicine, but
42:07
we're just not happy with the daily stay
42:09
on our program for the rest of your
42:12
life medications. Yeah, never again. Should I come
42:14
out as an anti-vaxxer now? If
42:16
I have kids, they're not getting vaccinated. I won't even- They
42:18
can assume, Jimmy. Yeah, I won't even get my dogs vaccinated
42:20
anymore. I don't do it either. Yeah, they don't need it.
42:23
Look, listen, if they get bit by rabies, I'll get them treated,
42:25
they'll be all right. They're not gonna get
42:27
bit by rabies. They're not gonna get rabies. It doesn't
42:29
happen. Well, hold on, it can happen. Dog, let
42:31
me be careful here, but it's not gonna happen
42:33
to me. So I don't care. No,
42:36
like, listen, I was vaccinated as a kid. I
42:38
got, what, we got like half a dozen shots
42:41
and now it's up to 72. Something
42:44
has changed. Well, you know, as RFK points
42:46
out and so many in this fear that
42:49
it wasn't until, and actually it was Jim
42:52
Carrey and Jenny McCarthy on
42:55
Nightline or whatever the show was that night. And
42:57
they go on and they say that literally, I
42:59
mean, they've done it many times, but this was
43:01
the clip that's famous. Back in
43:03
the eight, like 89 was when autism
43:06
came around and that's when the vaccine
43:08
schedule changed and that's kind of the
43:10
birth of a lot of really different
43:13
exotic diseases became much more prevalent within children.
43:16
Autism didn't even exist before that. So here's
43:18
something wild is that there's been a bunch
43:20
of challenges put out there in the last
43:22
couple of years for people to say, find
43:25
me one case of autism in the Amish
43:27
community. Oh, that's right. And I'm
43:29
not here to tell you there's zero cases. I don't
43:31
know. No. But. Bobby
43:33
told the story. What did he say? He
43:35
said they went into the Amish community. I
43:38
went to a Maha event here in town. Oh, cool.
43:40
A month ago or whatever. It was Charlie
43:42
Kirk put it on, it was Bobby. Right on.
43:45
I'd love to connect with that guy. Yeah, and Callie
43:47
Means. Right on. And
43:50
my sister, Casey Means wrote Good Energy, that
43:52
book. And he said they went into the
43:54
Amish community to try and find if there
43:56
was any autism and they found three cases.
43:59
And those three cases were all. children that
44:01
were adopted after they had had their vaccinations
44:03
in the hospital. RFK has come under so
44:05
much heat, but his lawsuits prove
44:08
that he's right. He has sued the
44:10
pharmaceutical companies multiple times over and was
44:13
never lost, correct? People
44:15
need to look into this. Because of him, I learned
44:18
that, hey, just so you know, these shots are given
44:20
to kids, these were not tested. People
44:23
don't even believe it when they hear it. That's
44:25
not possible. It's like, no, look into the details.
44:28
It's the truth. I really like RFK, and
44:30
I'm so happy to see him teaming up with
44:32
President Trump. I think that there's a few people
44:34
that are going to move the needle the most
44:37
with voters, and Bobby
44:39
is one of them. Totally. He's
44:41
that independent guy. I really like him.
44:43
Bobby, Elon, Tucker. Those are my top
44:46
three, those guys. They're wonderful. These
44:48
are good. Charlie Kirk's doing a pretty good
44:50
job. I think Jordan Peterson has a pretty
44:53
strong voice. I think those are like your
44:55
five. They're
44:58
the good guys, and they all come under so
45:00
much heat, but I'm like, you just got to listen to them.
45:03
Tucker Carlson's a wonderful guy. I haven't met him personally,
45:06
but I would love to. Better
45:08
in person. Better human being in person.
45:11
Oh, wow. Let's say it
45:13
a lot. Even more connected,
45:15
curious, engaged, funny,
45:19
caring, better even in person.
45:21
I was thrilled to hear him say, this is
45:23
just a number of months ago, he was giving
45:25
a speech in Las Vegas where he talked about
45:27
the mysteries of the pyramids. He
45:29
said it. He said, it is a fact that
45:32
we have no idea how the Egyptians built the pyramids. I
45:35
was in my house watching this on my phone
45:37
giving a applause. I'm like, yes.
45:40
Someone of notoriety is saying it because I'm like, this
45:42
is the truth. I get pushed back
45:44
all the time when I meet new people, and
45:46
they're inquiring about what I do. I
45:49
mentioned, well, we have no idea how the Egyptians built
45:51
the pyramids. They go, well, no, we do. And I'm
45:53
like, no, we really don't. It's
45:56
a fact we don't. Out of
45:58
the hundreds of thousands of hieroglyphs. all
46:00
over Egypt. Not a single one of them shows how
46:02
they move stone, how they cut stone, how they, I
46:06
mean there is some glyphs showing how they carve
46:08
some stuff into stone. But as far as cutting
46:10
granite blocks, absolutely not. And there
46:12
is not a single depiction on how they constructed the
46:14
pyramids. Like I gotta reiterate it, like just
46:17
to let everyone know, it is a
46:19
complete mystery. I mean they've got pine cones. Yeah.
46:21
They've got incense. Things
46:24
like that where they're holding, they've got a
46:26
little suitcase briefcase. We still don't know what's
46:28
in the bag, we
46:30
still don't really know what's in there. I think that it's a
46:32
power source. I think that's a mini arc. I think that's how
46:34
they lit things up. But they
46:36
show like these kinds of things, but they
46:38
never show fire. They don't even show fire.
46:41
That's, I forgot about that. That is actually a
46:44
very interesting point. They don't show that at all.
46:46
They don't know how they lit anything. Yeah. And
46:49
the lack of soot inside the pyramids. There's none.
46:52
None. You know, a lot of people are surprised to
46:54
learn that. Like how did they see what they were doing in there? You go
46:56
to the temples, you go to the pyramids, anything now. And
46:58
there's janky cords running along the side
47:01
of it to like a light bar
47:03
that shows you the, it's like there
47:05
was none of that. Oh,
47:07
I'm so glad you brought that up because you've
47:10
been in the great Pyramid King's Chamber. They got a fricking
47:13
air conditioning unit in there and they're running wires all
47:15
over the place. Just wires going on. Yeah, it's
47:17
terrible. Well, I'm so glad they drilled holes
47:20
in the pyramids so they could have fixed the wires to it.
47:22
And I'm just so grateful they're not gonna drill a hole to
47:24
look into the chamber, the hidden chamber
47:26
because I just don't wanna see
47:28
the pyramid to get wrecked. Leave it as it is. Lost
47:31
ancient mysteries don't exist. Just leave it as it
47:33
is, you know, and that's fine. That's
47:36
sarcasm. I mean, they take skulls,
47:39
they take small artifacts
47:42
and they take a piece of that so they can look
47:44
into it and discover what it is. And this is something
47:46
the size of a cup, you know? Like,
47:48
why wouldn't you take this? People can't
47:50
appreciate how big the great pyramid is
47:52
until you go there. It's insane. It
47:54
is gigantic. I think that if
47:57
you're right, back to the original first
47:59
topic of the... great pyramid and the chamber
48:01
that hasn't been explored, that there's
48:03
a very good chance that they've already gone. And
48:06
that either there's something in there that
48:08
they don't feel like they want to
48:10
expose, whether
48:13
it's something levitating, the
48:15
Knights of Templar are still in there, there's
48:17
some kind of alien, who knows, somebody
48:20
that's 5,000 years old, or
48:22
there is a technology that
48:26
would change the world. Right.
48:28
I will say this, let's just
48:30
be the devil's advocate and say
48:32
there's no conspiracy in
48:35
that regard. There's no lost technology, there's no
48:37
Ark of the Covenant, there's no nothing. If
48:40
nothing else, the
48:42
lack of excavations there highlights incompetence
48:45
and mismanagement in the archaeological realm from the regards
48:48
of that. If they were hiding one thing and
48:50
one thing only, it could be ancient
48:53
artifacts that are invaluable, gold and other
48:55
artifacts, because there's people like
48:57
Zahi Awas that have already been implicated in
48:59
theft in the black market. The
49:01
black market in Egyptian antiquities is
49:03
insane. A few years ago,
49:05
there was a study put out, it wasn't a
49:07
study, it was an article that had gathered some
49:10
information that the black market for just Egyptian mummies
49:12
alone, not including all the other relics, was
49:15
estimated between two and six billion
49:17
dollars a year. So
49:19
if we go with four billion, right in the middle. They
49:21
keep finding them when they're two and six billion dollars a
49:23
year. They keep exchanging them, are they selling them? They
49:27
keep finding them? Okay, so yes.
49:29
Because they're not in the sarcophagus, it's just
49:31
breaking news. They've never found the
49:33
big stone boxes. They've never found a
49:35
body in one of those, right? Correct.
49:39
Right. Oh, here's something fun. I
49:41
just did a video on this recently. Back in
49:43
March, in the Nile Delta, approximately an hour north
49:45
of Cairo, there was a 62 ton quartz
49:49
sarcophagus found while they were building a new hospital
49:51
building. Every time they go building something in Cairo
49:53
or in Egypt, they're finding stuff. Because
49:55
it got so buried because the water used to
49:58
be so much higher. Yes. like
50:00
I remember when we went to Luxor, there's
50:02
like roads. There's basically a really really long roads
50:04
and there's statues all along the way. There'll be
50:06
different kinds of animals but it's always like a
50:08
line with a different head. And
50:10
so the whole street is lined but
50:13
at one point not that long ago
50:15
that was all covered. It was all
50:17
underground still because the
50:19
Nile used to be so much more. There
50:21
would be the flood. Like it would flood.
50:23
Every year there'd be a seasonal flood and
50:25
so there's so much that's buried. It's
50:28
wild but here's where it gets even more wild.
50:30
So this goes on to your point about how
50:32
all these massive stone sarcophagus that they found, they
50:34
never found a body in them. So
50:36
this is another example. They found this 62 ton
50:39
sarcophagus and there was
50:41
nothing, there was no body in it except for
50:43
there was relics. No photos
50:45
of these relics were published. In
50:47
one of the articles I'm quoting
50:50
medium.com that described that there
50:52
was a tablet in it that
50:55
was an unknown metal.
50:58
So I'll say that again. There was a
51:01
tablet of unknown metal found
51:03
in a stone sarcophagus. It
51:06
could be from a meteor. I don't know. Look, it
51:09
was only one of the articles out of
51:11
let's say six or seven that published this
51:13
finding that mentioned unknown metal. So I don't
51:15
know what their source is. It could be
51:17
a nothing burger but I'm like
51:19
if nothing else none
51:21
of the photos shared any of the relics that
51:24
were found which I thought was interesting. All the
51:26
other articles made it a point to highlight because
51:28
they're all like regurgitating what the authorities told
51:30
them which was that they took great care to
51:32
move the sarcophagus and excavate it and they were
51:35
gonna bring it to wherever to do restoration. But
51:38
when I looked at the photos of the sarcophagus they shared
51:41
it looks like, and I'm not exaggerating, the
51:43
sledge hammered their way into it. They beat the
51:45
shit out of it. So
51:47
they obviously had an urgency to go see what was in it
51:49
which I don't blame them. I'd want to see it inside of
51:52
it too. But they didn't show anything that was found in it
51:54
and I just I just don't understand the lack of transparency. This
51:57
makes us conspiracy-minded people go wild because I'm
51:59
like okay. Okay, well show me
52:01
this tablet of unknown metal. What is this? What
52:03
are we talking about here? But
52:05
back to your point, they didn't find a body in
52:07
it. Just another example. When we were there in
52:10
December, I can't remember exactly where it was. We
52:12
stayed in and around Cairo the entire
52:14
time and only went to pyramids. We
52:16
didn't actually visit any temples, but there
52:18
was one that had sort of a
52:20
big hallway of tons of these boxes,
52:22
these sarcophagus boxes. And they
52:25
had shown how the top
52:27
has moved over. Sometimes they had to blow it
52:29
up to be able to see. Anyway, in all
52:31
of this hallway with all of them in there,
52:34
not a single one had anything in it.
52:37
And so the question is, is like, why is
52:39
there a box? Why is there a
52:41
lid? And why is there nothing inside? And
52:43
the question is, is what are
52:45
we not seeing? There's
52:48
something with frequency or
52:50
energy or something that
52:52
we're not putting together. There's
52:55
something there. And this is the site you're mentioning
52:57
is called the Serpium. And to anyone that's not
52:59
familiar, I recommend they Google it. I think there's
53:01
27 boxes in total that they've
53:03
found, but now they have done excavation.
53:05
And apparently there's a room of
53:08
another dozen or so. I can't remember the exact amount, but
53:10
there's more there that they haven't seen. There's like a tunnel
53:12
that they dug through and found more. And
53:15
the passageway to get in is not big
53:17
enough for them even. And so they've literally
53:19
been essentially made in
53:22
that space. It's wild. And
53:24
people should look this up. They range from
53:26
60 tons to 100 tons, including the
53:29
top. But none of them had anything
53:31
in it. And the one that they blew open with dynamite
53:33
to see what was it, because it was closed, and
53:35
it was empty, which is
53:37
so bizarre. So to anyone
53:40
curious, like, well, what does the mainstream
53:42
say? They say that they were being
53:44
built to pitumes for bulls, like cows,
53:47
and they just hadn't been sold yet and hadn't
53:49
been filled with the cows. And I'm like, they're
53:51
just making stuff up as they go. Although I
53:53
will say outside the entrance, there is a depiction
53:55
of a bull. But it's not
53:57
even sophisticated, like these 100-ton granite.
54:00
boxes that are in there. So I'm like, it
54:02
would lead some to think that that came
54:04
afterwards. But one of the things I remember noticing
54:07
about that site, the Serapim, is that if you
54:09
look around before you go in it, do you
54:11
remember how it's just dirt? Yeah. And
54:13
it's all buried underground. Yeah. So I'm like,
54:15
it's very bizarre. It looks like that's not the entrance. Like they've
54:17
like, kind of like the grave pyramid. Like they have to kind
54:19
of make one. Right. It looks like it
54:21
was covered up in a flood, but the way, it
54:23
looks like a wave came in and brought all that
54:25
earth over it. Yeah. But it could
54:27
be thousands of years of sediment, you know, or whatever. Well,
54:31
going back to just like overall, as far
54:33
as excavation goes, go back to the Tepe
54:35
and how they are going to save that
54:38
for future generations for excavation. Does that mean
54:40
they're completely halting it or does that just
54:42
mean they are like stretching it out? So
54:44
let me clarify because some people have misquoted
54:46
me and I got, so I create
54:49
a lot of controversy when I brought this up
54:51
because there's a lot of issues going on to
54:53
go back to the Tepe. So they have not
54:55
halted excavations entirely. What they have done,
54:57
and it's in writing, in
54:59
the last few years, have walked
55:02
back the large scale excavations and are
55:04
now focusing on conservation of the site.
55:07
They will continue to excavate
55:09
it, but there's no plan
55:11
to unearth the additional
55:14
128 approximately pillars that are still under the
55:16
earth that have been identified through ground penetrating
55:19
radar. And a full
55:21
scale excavation has been deferred for
55:23
future generations with 150 year approximate
55:25
timetable. But there's
55:27
other stuff involving the site
55:29
that's pretty wild, which is that if
55:32
you look at the aerial photos of
55:35
it, there's four sets of tree orchards
55:37
of all of trees that were planted
55:39
over the site a literal decade after
55:41
excavations began. And these
55:44
through ground penetrating radar and I established this through
55:46
an archeologist that physically worked at Quebecley Tepe and
55:48
the guy doesn't like me, he ended up blocking
55:51
me on Twitter because I was nice
55:53
to him, but I was literally bringing up the controversies.
55:55
I'm like, why are there trees planted on top of
55:57
ancient ruins? And he cooperated, he said, I, I
56:00
asked them very politely, can
56:02
you clarify if any of these orchards of trees
56:05
have been planted on top of ancient ruins? And
56:07
the answer was yes. And so
56:10
the explanation is that the people, the
56:12
farmers that owned the land prior
56:15
to the Turkish ministry acquiring
56:18
the land is that they planted the olive trees in
56:20
order to boost the value of the land, which
56:23
doesn't make much sense to me because I'm
56:25
like, go back, Lee Tappe is invaluable. It's
56:28
the oldest ancient site on earth. It's
56:30
worth, God knows how much money. What are we, and
56:33
are you gonna tell me that olive trees have increased the value? Pretty sure as
56:35
art goes, this is priceless. Money controls the
56:37
world and I can wrap my head
56:39
around that dumb decisions are made by people trying to
56:41
make money. Okay, fine. However,
56:43
those trees were planted 24 years ago and
56:47
there's no plan to remove the trees. And
56:49
those tree roots could stand to damage the
56:52
ruins beneath them because that's what roots do.
56:54
And if nothing else, there's no plan
56:57
to remove the trees, which I have
56:59
two things to say on this, which not only
57:01
highlights that there's no plan to fully excavate the
57:03
site, out of all species of trees
57:05
you could plant on top of it, did you
57:07
know that there was a law created, I believe
57:09
in 1935 in Turkey, that
57:12
it is called the olive tree law. It
57:15
is illegal to cut olive trees down in
57:17
the country of Turkey. Well, isn't that convenient?
57:19
It's very convenient. Of course, it's a coincidence.
57:21
There's no conspiracy here. But
57:23
I'm like, really? So they
57:25
could be fined if they tear any of them
57:27
down. And so when I made
57:30
these videos on it, it caused a lot of
57:32
controversy and the leaders of the site responded
57:34
in numerous articles and
57:36
they basically called me a conspiracy
57:38
theorist. And what
57:40
they said was that these olive trees,
57:43
roots will grow horizontal and will not
57:45
cause any damage to the
57:47
ruins. But then the same gentleman, his
57:50
name is Dr. Lee Carroll, who is the head
57:52
of field work at Gobekli Tepe. He
57:54
went on a podcast after my video to try to
57:56
like rebut it. And he said
57:58
that they are... actively
58:01
monitoring the trees and the roots
58:04
to ensure that they're not going to damage the ruins.
58:06
And I'm like, why would you waste your time? Yeah.
58:09
How stupid. Which is it? I
58:11
thought you just said that these trees, yeah, it's
58:13
going to be fine. And so it's, it, look,
58:15
best case scenario, it's wild incompetence. But
58:17
then I look at, and here's a fun thing
58:19
to talk about is the Ganung Padang site in
58:22
Indonesia. Do you want to talk about that?
58:24
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I
58:26
hadn't, you had mentioned that and I was like, so I looked it up.
58:28
I mean, it looks like, it's like stair stepped. Yes. It
58:31
has like a structural sort
58:33
of stair stepping, like pyramid
58:36
like sort of, it's, but it's kind
58:38
of vegetative, right? It's green. It's,
58:40
it's like shelves all the way up. Exactly.
58:43
It looks like a huge, huge area. Yeah.
58:46
What they did was it's a mountain and
58:48
they, it's a pyramidal shape. So they carved
58:50
these theories of five terraces. So it's like
58:53
a pyramid. It's like steps and steps. Yep.
58:55
And it's absolutely man-made. Like the mountain
58:57
might be natural level it is, but
59:00
they, they geo-engineered essentially a And
59:03
what's wild about this site is that it
59:06
could be somewhere between 24 to 27,000 years old
59:10
and the, that's based on soil
59:13
dating that ground penetrating radar
59:15
has identified a subterranean tunnel and
59:17
chamber beneath those ruins.
59:20
And this was highlighted by Graham Hancock in
59:22
his show, Ancient Apocalypse in the first episode.
59:25
And there is a notable geologist that
59:28
examined the data of that ground penetrating
59:30
radar. And he says
59:32
that there's significant traits about it that
59:34
indicate that it's man-made. Now
59:37
the naysayers will say it's probably just a
59:39
lava tube and that the site itself was
59:42
built on a volcanic anomaly. It's a, you
59:44
know, it's volcanic in nature and
59:46
it's probably just natural. And
59:48
I'm like, okay, well the reality is that we don't
59:50
know what it is. And just 10 years
59:52
ago, the authorities within Indonesia,
59:55
and this is in writing, they said
59:57
that they were willing to allocate unlimited
1:00:00
funding and resources to excavate the
1:00:02
site. And then something happened a
1:00:04
few years ago where they walked that back and stopped
1:00:06
the excavations. And as of right
1:00:08
now, there is no plan in place to
1:00:11
excavate whatever that mysterious anomaly
1:00:14
is under the ground. Maybe it's
1:00:16
natural, maybe it's manmade, but if it is
1:00:18
manmade, this would be one of the most
1:00:20
incredible discoveries of our time because a
1:00:22
site like that should not date back based on what we were taught,
1:00:24
24 to 27,000 years old. And
1:00:28
I'm like, there's this reoccurring theme, whether it's
1:00:30
the Great Pyramid, Gobekli Tepe, and Gudang Paneang,
1:00:32
that the world's most mysterious and oldest ancient
1:00:34
sites on Earth are not being fully
1:00:36
excavated. So I go down this rabbit
1:00:38
hole and I'm like, okay, well, let me just follow the money
1:00:40
and see who the decision makers are. And
1:00:43
so a lot of people, I didn't study
1:00:45
archaeology, I studied business in school. And if
1:00:47
there's anything I've learned, it's like just go
1:00:49
looking for, follow the money,
1:00:52
look to see what decision makers
1:00:54
are. Logical practical pathways. And so
1:00:56
this gets into a wild conspiracy
1:00:58
that ties in to Gobekli Tepe
1:01:00
and Gudang Paneang, which is
1:01:02
that, so let me walk back from Gudang Paneang
1:01:04
for a second and go back to Gobekli Tepe
1:01:07
and share that what happened was when
1:01:10
they were doing the large-scale excavations, it was
1:01:12
under different management. And then you
1:01:15
had a company called the Doge's Group, which
1:01:17
is located- Oh, and by George Soros. No, I'm just kidding. Yeah.
1:01:20
It's worse than that. Black Rock. It's Black
1:01:23
Rock, isn't it? Don't tell
1:01:25
me it's Black Rock, seriously. State
1:01:27
Street, Vanguard. The world
1:01:30
economic form. So listen to this.
1:01:32
The Doge's Group is a multi-billion
1:01:35
dollar group- Klaus Schwab. Klaus
1:01:37
Schwab ran it, ran the
1:01:39
world economic form. So this
1:01:41
is fun. So, because
1:01:44
I'm going to preface it with this, because some people say, well,
1:01:46
maybe there's a lack of funding in Gobekli Tepe. No, there's not.
1:01:48
The Doge's Group, which is a billion dollar conglomerate made up of
1:01:50
250 companies, mostly entertainment,
1:01:53
for some reason, the CEO of
1:01:55
the Doge's Group decided to essentially
1:01:59
acquire sole proprietorship
1:02:01
of Gobekli Tepe. They did,
1:02:04
back in
1:02:06
2016, they went to the World
1:02:08
Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland.
1:02:11
This is real, like people could Google
1:02:13
this. They announced this partnership at
1:02:16
the World Economic Forum annual meeting in
1:02:18
Davos where they were going to allocate
1:02:20
initial funding of 15 million dollars to
1:02:22
set up tourism infrastructure and acquire the
1:02:25
excavation rights or at least controlling
1:02:27
the funding the excavation. And
1:02:31
the CEO of that company is a longtime member
1:02:33
of the World Economic Forum. Now let me be,
1:02:35
let me just say this is a conspiracy theory.
1:02:37
I'm not saying with any certainty that the World
1:02:39
Economic Forum is controlling that site. However,
1:02:42
I find it very interesting that the
1:02:44
CEO of this site acquired
1:02:47
it. He's a longtime
1:02:49
member of the World Economic Forum and
1:02:51
then since this came in, so they
1:02:53
took control, the partnership was announced 2016,
1:02:56
they started building the infrastructure for tourism
1:02:58
in 2017 and since this has happened,
1:03:00
back in I believe it was 2020
1:03:03
or 2019, tourism per year there was
1:03:06
under 20,000 people per year.
1:03:08
Now it's at almost a half a
1:03:10
million. It's become a tourism cash cow.
1:03:12
If there's no World Economic Forum conspiracy,
1:03:14
if nothing else, it's just
1:03:16
billionaires that are trying to
1:03:19
make money that they, hey we already invested enough, just
1:03:21
don't excavate the site, I don't want to invest
1:03:23
millions of dollars more, just bring us in the
1:03:25
money. But here's where it makes me think there's
1:03:27
a World Economic Forum connection. Because when
1:03:29
you go back over to Ganang Pareng now, which
1:03:32
again could be this 27,000 year old
1:03:34
pyramidal structure and something happened
1:03:37
where they went from saying they were going
1:03:39
to allocate unlimited funding and resources to excavate
1:03:41
it to now there's no plan. So
1:03:43
I'm like okay, well who's making the decisions there?
1:03:47
Well it turns out, and I'm forgetting
1:03:49
his name but it doesn't matter, he
1:03:51
is the Minister of
1:03:54
the Ministry of Culture,
1:03:56
Education, Research and Technology within
1:03:58
Indonesia which controls archaeological
1:04:00
excavations at Gennang Penang, and
1:04:03
he is a global shaper
1:04:06
of the World Economic Forum. And Klaus Schwab,
1:04:08
who was the leader of the World Economic
1:04:10
Forum, announced, he bragged about
1:04:12
this in an interview by the way,
1:04:15
he gloated, about how they have infiltrated
1:04:17
the Kavnits of the... and
1:04:19
you know, you're gonna eat the zee
1:04:21
bugs and that guy. You
1:04:23
learn nothing and be happy. Yeah, and
1:04:25
just so people understand, this is the
1:04:27
organization that is pushing for 15 minute
1:04:29
cities. They're the organization that wants to...
1:04:32
Globalization. Yes, and they want to ban
1:04:34
gas-powered stoves, they want to ban gas-powered
1:04:37
vehicles, and they want people just...
1:04:39
fake meat. Those people.
1:04:42
Own nothing, rent everything. Yeah, and be
1:04:44
happy. And you'll be happy. They're
1:04:46
exact words, this is a real quote. You'll own
1:04:49
nothing and be happy. Yeah, yeah, which is absurd.
1:04:52
And so they tie in, of course, the
1:04:54
Black Rock. They're all connected, powerful members of
1:04:57
those organizations are members of the World Economic
1:04:59
Forum. Yes. So I'm like, this guy, it's
1:05:01
like, I'm gonna butcher it so I'll just
1:05:04
stop, but he's the minister of that, of
1:05:06
the department that controls the the excavations
1:05:09
there, and he is a
1:05:11
literal global shaper. You can Google him, he's
1:05:13
on their website. So I'm like, okay, so
1:05:15
at multiple sites around the world, it just
1:05:17
so happens that key decision-makers at those sites are
1:05:19
members of the World Economic Forum. I'll
1:05:22
again say, you know, this doesn't prove a
1:05:24
World Economic Conspiracy, like, because I've got a
1:05:26
lot of flack over it, but
1:05:28
I'm saying there's a connection. And the
1:05:30
response I got from the
1:05:32
archaeological community was a bit bizarre, because he
1:05:34
attacked me and I'm like, hey, guys, maybe
1:05:36
you should focus on the fact that
1:05:39
there's a lack of excavations here. I'm trying to give
1:05:41
you guys jobs and work. I just want to see
1:05:43
these sites excavated. I think it's when you take the
1:05:45
two dots and connect them of like, why would you
1:05:47
go? Why would you investigate to the point that you
1:05:49
know that there's something there like a tunnel, but then
1:05:51
not go further? Kind of like why
1:05:53
would you sonar, like deep,
1:05:55
you know, penetrate through the stone, the
1:05:57
Great Pyramid, to see that there's a
1:08:00
Mars shirt on and
1:08:02
you know we're trying to get off
1:08:04
planet for curiosity for exploration for
1:08:08
safety I mean as we were talking
1:08:10
about earlier asteroids nuclear like get off
1:08:12
planet is the or go in earth
1:08:14
right so getting off planet has its
1:08:16
role and so think about if
1:08:18
you know in the scope of our universe
1:08:21
being you know 14 and a half billion
1:08:23
years old or whatever the number is our
1:08:25
planet 4.3 or something
1:08:27
like that billion years old that
1:08:30
if someone's just a little further along in that
1:08:32
14 or a little further behind it puts you
1:08:34
in a totally different place look where we've come
1:08:36
in a hundred years right and so some other
1:08:41
species because there has to be others mathematically
1:08:43
how could they not be that that what
1:08:45
are they gonna try and do maybe they're
1:08:47
trying to get off planet too and what
1:08:49
would you do if you went on to
1:08:51
a planet you'd try and create a civilization
1:08:53
this is what if something was there already
1:08:55
what if something that was more primitive than
1:08:57
us was there well we try and work
1:08:59
with it we're trying to see how to
1:09:01
yes you would like you'd you try and
1:09:03
figure it all out this is like let's
1:09:05
just be us somewhere else in the universe
1:09:07
at a different point in time yeah we
1:09:10
would fuck with it that's what we do
1:09:12
we fuck with things that
1:09:14
is exactly what we do like I I
1:09:16
could have the best intentions in the universe
1:09:18
and I would
1:09:20
probably if I was in control why
1:09:23
wouldn't I go somewhere and help them out I would have the
1:09:25
you know I mean if I saw some primitive early
1:09:27
intelligent species and I felt I could help them
1:09:30
I'd want to maybe maybe it's some
1:09:32
people say it's immoral you or unethical just let
1:09:34
things take its course I'm like I don't agree
1:09:36
with that when I see animals suffering or you
1:09:38
know or something in the wild like I help
1:09:40
it like I help little insects flip over if
1:09:42
they're on their back like there's something in us to
1:09:45
want to like play with things yeah and
1:09:48
it just would make a lot of sense if we came
1:09:50
from somewhere else and I think that the very nature of
1:09:52
us to want to go elsewhere might
1:09:55
be the proof it's
1:09:58
a very very logical thought for sure like
1:14:01
the proof is in the pudding, it's the
1:14:03
cover-up. You know, they're not being transparent. A
1:14:05
lot of these pharmaceutical companies will hire out
1:14:07
to do research to figure out, to learn
1:14:09
more about the drug and that they're more
1:14:11
of a marketing agency. Yep, and they hire
1:14:13
prestigious management consulting firms to
1:14:16
do it for them. These
1:14:18
aren't like doctors wearing white lab coats or
1:14:20
something like that that have our best interest.
1:14:23
These are literal sharks,
1:14:25
like people with finance majors and MBAs, like
1:14:27
these are people that are killers in
1:14:29
their field. They only care about the dollar.
1:14:31
And I say that because it's an experience
1:14:34
of someone speaking about, well, we'll take this
1:14:36
data and then you can work with
1:14:39
the drug companies. Because they're
1:14:41
really not the ones designing the drugs anyway, they're not really
1:14:43
the ones figuring things out. They're the ones that are going
1:14:45
to go market it. Right. And you,
1:14:47
I mean, you in your life experience, because
1:14:49
you've lived a very interesting life, you've been
1:14:51
around people that are, I imagine, you've
1:14:54
been around the cutthroats, people that are
1:14:56
very dollar oriented. And I'm sure you've seen in your own
1:14:58
life, people that will focus
1:15:00
on the dollar over maybe morals or
1:15:02
ethics. And I think
1:15:05
people understand it now that that's what's
1:15:07
running the world is sharks, killers. You
1:15:09
know what I mean? I'm
1:15:11
not talking about killers. Here's the thing where we get
1:15:13
a little caught in this election situation or in situations
1:15:16
where you have killers and then
1:15:18
you have people with ideals, morals,
1:15:20
and integrity, and highest
1:15:24
good in mind, is that lying
1:15:26
and cheating works. Right. And
1:15:30
to be put in a position, right? It
1:15:33
can get you somewhere. And so when you're not
1:15:35
willing to do that, it means you're not willing
1:15:37
to do everything, right? Because it's
1:15:39
not in your moral compass. It's
1:15:42
not in your constitution. So
1:15:45
I think that's where we get a little caught
1:15:47
is that a lot of times we're not willing
1:15:49
to do those things. Right. People
1:15:51
rather do the easy wrong over
1:15:53
the hard right. And I've
1:15:56
known people like this. Some people, it's like
1:15:58
that show Breaking Bad. do
1:24:00
your own thing, less government, more you, more
1:24:03
tax dollars, less tax dollars
1:24:05
so they're in your pocket, more in your pocket.
1:24:07
Like these are all things that have to do
1:24:09
with being able to become
1:24:12
independently successful. You know what's
1:24:14
interesting is that I'm
1:24:16
noticing a theme, so when we talk
1:24:18
about capitalism, it's almost like this hot
1:24:20
topic now where people are supported or
1:24:22
against it and you get this emerging,
1:24:24
that's happened throughout history where people are
1:24:27
supporting communism and there's different words for
1:24:29
it. They try to
1:24:31
like dumb it down with like socialism, but
1:24:33
it's all the same thing. It's about allocating
1:24:36
authority over your life to
1:24:38
other people and a lot
1:24:40
of these people that I noticed that are like
1:24:42
anti-capitalism and supporting socialism are
1:24:45
people that seem to have not traveled
1:24:47
to countries where there's dictatorships or actual
1:24:49
socialism and they don't seem to grasp
1:24:52
that whenever you give a selective
1:24:54
group of people power over your
1:24:56
autonomy, it will undoubtedly
1:24:58
lead to control and decay
1:25:01
and tyranny and
1:25:05
it's just cyclic throughout history. It
1:25:07
keeps happening over and over and over again
1:25:10
and it just really crushes
1:25:12
me to see that the more people
1:25:14
that aren't aware of just how simple
1:25:17
it is, that if you give people
1:25:19
power over you, it will lead to
1:25:21
tyranny and it's the opposite of capitalism.
1:25:24
Capitalism is that freedom of
1:25:26
choice to make decisions over your own
1:25:29
life and it's such a
1:25:31
beautiful thing and the United States being the
1:25:33
most successful country on earth arguably in
1:25:36
all of history is proof of
1:25:38
this that like and that's how it all started.
1:25:40
We had security, full bellies and
1:25:42
freedom and it was a
1:25:44
nice recipe. I know how you're voting I think. Yeah,
1:25:47
I'm all in for Trump 100% and I'm proud of it. A
1:25:51
lot of people might not like his personality in some
1:25:53
ways. I actually love him. I like that he's a
1:25:56
fighter because I have it in me too. There
1:25:58
are certain people are just fighters. and it's just in
1:26:01
my blood, it gets me going. And so I don't
1:26:03
care about any mean tweets he ever made. I'm like,
1:26:05
you know, he's Teflon, and it's
1:26:07
a decision between good and evil at this point, and
1:26:09
I support him 100%. And
1:26:11
I also think that, and this is something fun,
1:26:14
tied into a fun conversation of things I look
1:26:16
into, is that a few years ago
1:26:18
when he was still in office, this was September of 2020, he
1:26:21
was meeting in Sacramento for this, involving
1:26:24
the Sacramento fires that were happening, and
1:26:27
the conversation evolved climate change.
1:26:30
And he was talking about, one
1:26:33
of the gentlemen there was talking about manmade
1:26:35
warming and crap, and Trump
1:26:37
said, well, it's gonna cool first, right?
1:26:40
And he said it like a matter of fact. And
1:26:43
the scientist guy was
1:26:45
like, well, that's not what the data suggests. But
1:26:47
he's like, oh, I don't think you, he
1:26:49
said, I don't think the science knows what the science is
1:26:52
talking about. And what's interesting is that
1:26:54
when he said so definitively that it's gonna
1:26:56
cool first, is that this ties into what
1:26:58
Elon Musk had said about ice ages being
1:27:00
a deep, deep rabbit hole, and
1:27:02
through my studies of looking into the interglacial periods
1:27:04
that I talked about earlier, when we were talking
1:27:06
about how there's these cycles of warm and cool,
1:27:09
and the data shows, and
1:27:12
I should also mention this, that Media Matters
1:27:14
tried to eviscerate me over this point, where
1:27:17
I said, I believe that the data might
1:27:19
indicate that the earth is cold more often
1:27:21
than it's hot. And they responded saying that
1:27:23
that contradicts mainstream science and that I'm wrong.
1:27:27
No, the only thing I was wrong about was
1:27:29
to say that the data might indicate
1:27:31
that the earth is cold more often than it's hot.
1:27:34
There are studies, if
1:27:36
you Google this, like the Utah Geological Survey is
1:27:38
one of the most prestigious surveys
1:27:41
as far as climate change. And
1:27:44
their own data says it point blank,
1:27:46
which is that the earth is cold
1:27:48
more often than it's hot, that the
1:27:51
glacial periods, which is
1:27:53
periods of cooling when the glaciers grow, in
1:27:55
the interglacial periods, which are the periods
1:27:58
of warming, the data proves. I
1:30:00
would love just 30 seconds of his time, and
1:30:03
Elon's as well, to ask
1:30:06
like, hey, so real quick, why
1:30:08
did you say it was gonna cool? Like what is it, like
1:30:10
what direction are you going here with that? Like it's
1:30:12
like. I was supposed to
1:30:14
be going to Mar-a-Lago. Really? And yeah,
1:30:17
but the hurricane is coming through the Gulf. And
1:30:20
so there was a maha event, there was a
1:30:22
round table tomorrow. Oh wow. That
1:30:25
I was gonna do, and then there was a dinner. There
1:30:27
was like a reception and a dinner. Wow.
1:30:30
Yeah. I had the, let me give rumble.com a
1:30:33
shout out. Yeah. Because of them,
1:30:35
doing podcasts with them, I
1:30:37
was able to go to
1:30:39
Mar-a-Lago last November, and
1:30:41
this was so, what a cool
1:30:43
event that was. Really? Oh, it was neat to
1:30:45
be there. I heard just the events there are so great.
1:30:47
Yeah, Trump knows how to put stuff on. They
1:30:50
know how to wine and dine people, and it's the best of everything.
1:30:53
And I imagine he'll have an opportunity to go back.
1:30:55
Were you gonna meet with Trump? Yeah,
1:30:57
he was gonna be at the reception and dinner. Did
1:31:00
you meet him before? I saw a picture. I haven't met him.
1:31:02
No, I just sort of smiled. You were
1:31:04
tempted to go be like, hey. He was at the
1:31:06
F1 race in Miami. Yeah. Yeah.
1:31:10
You gotta, have you met Elon yet? No. Those,
1:31:12
I imagine you would like to meet. Those are two, I'd
1:31:15
love to meet him, of course, yeah. When you do. If
1:31:17
you could just, if you remember, like
1:31:20
hey, so the Ice Age thing.
1:31:22
Yeah. Why? Just, you know.
1:31:24
Yeah, are we gonna freeze before we boil?
1:31:27
Just let me know. I'd be more than any, I'd
1:31:30
pay them for their time. Just, I
1:31:32
have some ideas, but just tell me which direction to
1:31:34
go. I have a feeling if, you
1:31:37
know, their Trump is
1:31:39
elected again, that whole group
1:31:41
gets in. I think it's gonna be a lot different. I
1:31:44
hope that trickles down into all the things that we
1:31:46
were talking about today, which are, you
1:31:48
know, sites that might expose truths.
1:31:50
And I think that they're a
1:31:52
group that's really in favor of the, it's
1:31:55
like the thing obviously is make America great again, but I
1:31:57
think it could be greater than it's ever been. at
1:32:00
least in our modern awareness. And we
1:32:02
could be aware of these
1:32:04
technologies. Maybe they come in, maybe free
1:32:06
energy becomes a real thing, things like
1:32:08
that. Why not? Look, there's plenty
1:32:10
of ways to make money in the world. It
1:32:12
doesn't have to be like that. You know, to finish
1:32:15
up one thing, people, when cars
1:32:17
became a thing, I remember
1:32:20
there's, so back in New York City,
1:32:22
when cars were emerging, back before that,
1:32:24
people were riding horses on the regular.
1:32:27
And horses were big business. And at that
1:32:29
time, they believed that it was good to
1:32:31
destroy the horse industry. And it was going
1:32:33
to cause mass poverty if too many people
1:32:35
bought cars. And how did that
1:32:37
turn out? It turned out to be wonderful.
1:32:39
So it's like with everything creates new things.
1:32:41
So always be a way to make money.
1:32:43
Exactly. You know, you said it perfectly. Yeah.
1:32:45
Yeah. More on the same page. Yeah. Yeah.
1:32:47
Thanks, Jimmy. My pleasure. It was so fun
1:32:50
to deep dive. Yeah, let's do it again
1:32:52
sometime. For sure. Thanks, everybody, for listening to
1:32:54
the Pretty Intense podcast today. I hope you
1:32:56
enjoyed it. If you like what you heard
1:32:58
today and you want to hear more, please
1:33:00
click on the Subscribe button.
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